Quality Public Education for All New Jersey Students

 

 
     Salary Caps bill S1987 GSCS Feb. '15
     Salary Caps bill S1987 Lenhard Feb. '15
     Salary Caps bill S1987 Brogan Feb. '15
     Charter School bill - Statement Fall '14
     Charter School bill - GSCS Fall '14.docx
     State Budget Fiscal Year '14-'15 - GSCS.docx
     Excerpts - GSCS 3-20-13Testimony before the Senate Budget and Appropriations Committee
     6-10-13 GSCS on Charter bill A4177 Diegnan
     Tenure Reform legislation - bill passage 6-25-12 - voting history, sponsors, final amended bill S1455Ruiz- A3060Diegnan
     GSCS on Tenure Reform A3060 Diegnan, June 14 2012
     GSCS on Tenure Reform - S1455Ruiz 'TEACHNJ Act' June 18 2012
     GSCS on Moving the Voting Date of School Board Elections before the Senate State Government, Wagering, Tourism & Historic Preservation Committee, December 2011
     GSCS on Special Education funding issues, submitted for Senate Education hearing August 9, 2012
     GSCS on S2635 Establishes Special Education Task Force 12-1-11 Supports
     GSCS on State Budget Fiscal Year 2012-2013
     GSCS on State Budget Fiscal Year 2011-2012 to Legislative Budget and Appropriations Committees March 2011
     GSCS on Impact of Education Aid Cuts - Senator Buono hearing January 2011
     GSCS Message to State Board...State Board of Education to vote on Publishing New Charter School Regulations August 1, 2012, Wednesday
     GSCS Letter to Commissioner Cerf re Virtual Charter Schools 7-12-12
     GSCS on Proposed Charter School Regulations 6-6-12 before State Board of Education - Concerns
     GSCS on Charter Schools - Assembly Education Committee Hearing January 24, 2011
     GSCS on Education Mandates before Assembly Environment Committee September 2010
GSCS on Special Education funding issues, submitted for Senate Education hearing August 9, 2012
"...The statewide percentage of growth in special education instructional costs to districts, compared to instructional costs for regular education, eventually has cut into regular education - a 4% loss from regular instructional spending to a 4% increase in special education instructional spending from ’03-’04 to ’10-’11 -in a clearly demonstrable way.It is time to deal with the student support needs in both regular education programs as well as special education programs so that communities, taxpayers, parents and most importantly, students, are not pitted against one another.The Garden State Coalition has done extensive work and analysis on special education issues and looks forward to contributing much more to this conversation as it continues to evolve."

Garden State Coalition of Schools/GSCS

160 W State Street

Trenton, NJ 08608

Special Education Funding: Testimony submitted to Senate Education Committee 8-9-12

GSCS appreciates Senator Teresa Ruiz’ and the Senate Education Committee’s efforts to move this necessary conversation ahead. Thank you for providing this important opportunity.

The Garden State Coalition of Schools (GSCS) has been following special education funding for a number of years.  GSCS has stated issues with the way categorical special education aid was reduced and redistributed under SFRA and with how special education aid actually goes against the touted grain of the SFRA and does not follow the child, but rather is calculated on a census-based student average. These two issues alone are very problematic.

Today, however, we will bring to your attention a particular concern that has emerged steadily over time:  state and federal support do not begin the match the ever-rising costs of providing required programs for our most vulnerable children, special education students.

Local property taxes have had to grow steadily to meet this increasing gap of state and federal support. Correspondingly, over time the tension between special education funding needs and regular education needs has also grown.  The statewide percentage of growth in special education instructional costs to districts, compared to instructional costs for regular education, eventually has cut into regular education in a clearly demonstrable way - a 4% loss from regular instructional spending to a 4% increase in special education instructional spending from ’03-’04 to ’10-’11.   The attached charts make that clear (Chart 1 Statewide - All Regular Districts; Chart 2 - GSCS Districts).

It is time to deal with the student support needs in both regular education programs, as well as special education programs, so that communities, taxpayers, parents and most importantly, students, are not pitted against one another.

The Garden State Coalition has done extensive work and analysis on special education issues and looks forward to contributing much more to this conversation as it continues to evolve.